Quimper-Vannes Brittany Place Names Archive This Blogger site contains early notes, short essays and curiosities from the research behind Quimper-Vannes: Exploring the Place Names of Brittany . The new edition Quimper Vannes: A Journey Through the Place Names of Brtitany and a French translation Quimper Vannes: À la recherche des noms de lieux en Bretagne launch in June 2026. For new articles, launch updates and sample material, visit the new Substack: QUIMPER-VANNES: A Journey through the Place Names of Brittany https://quimpervannes.substack.com/
Update: Quimper-Vannes has moved to a new site: https://quimpervannes.substack.com/ This Blogger site is now an archive. New articles, extracts and launch news for the English edition and French translation will appear on Substack. The Picts dominated eastern and northern Scotland up to the 10th century. Although we know little about who the Picts were, we can guess from place name evidence that the now-extinct Pictish language was closely related to Brittonic languages such as Breton, Cornish and Welsh. Pictish settlements, for example, often had Brittonic prefixes such as Aber and Lan , as well as Pit -, a uniquely Pictish prefix indicating a portion or share of land. Aber is a common place name prefix in both Scotland [Aberdeen, Arbroath (Aberbrothick), Aberfeldy, Aberlour, Applecross (Aporcrosan)] and Wales [Aberdare, Abergavenny, Abertawe (Swansea), Aberystwyth]. Although it also occurs in Cornish and Breton, it is relatively rare. Aber means either the mouth...